Concerning small rockets,
I think the composite tanks of the Election are more expensive than metal
tanks, correct me if I;m wrong.
They use composite because they have no choice if they're going to have any
practical payload.
Relativity not only uses metal tanks but 3D print them, a major difference
from composites.
18% nickel maraging steel is superior to all metals including titanium. I
wonder if Relativity is using 250 grade?
Ken
On Sat, Dec 24, 2022 at 10:27 PM Aurthur Vimal <aurthur01@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The bigger the rocket resuability is important the smaller the rocket
reusability is not important. I think Rocket lab would not have a reusable
rocket. They just need mass production.
On Mon, 19 Dec 2022, 9:25 pm Matthew JL, <prmattjl@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
A one-way trip with refueling for landing is absolutely within current
engineering state-of-the-art… actually, 50 years ago’s state-of-the-art.
It’s always been a framing problem and so that last 1,500-2,000 fps of
delta-v for deorbit and recovery that’s doomed every other effort.
On Mon, Dec 19, 2022 at 1:33 AM roxanna Mason <rocketmaster.ken@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
The earth's gravity well is pretty deep but perhaps when carbon
nanotubes and/or other exotic high strength structures make it out of the
laboratory to the field, SSTO may become practical.
Ken
On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 8:23 PM Matthew JL <prmattjl@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I am eternally an SSTO hopeful.
On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 11:16 PM Alexander Mikhailov <
alexander.mikhailov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Musk suddenly gets his hands tied and makes easier the path for some
companies to try to reproduce SpaceX achievements. Not sure it will be
Rocket Lab, though... A good investment and a good technical team with
explicit goal to make a truly competitive launcher would be
interesting to watch, to say the least.
On 12/19/22, Matthew JL <prmattjl@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Musk is busy digging his own hole in the court of public opinion… noneed
to wait for some outside force to do him in.frankly
He’s not the saving grace most of the community thought he was and
I wish he’d let someone more competent, i.e., Shotwell, helm SpaceX.rocketmaster.ken@xxxxxxxxx>
On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 8:05 PM roxanna Mason <
wrote:bright
Henry, If you can believe NASA, the raday reflections are very
plentifulindicative of gold and PGM's. Cobalt is needed too and is not
byhere being an anode material for Lion batts and is mined in Africa
hechildren.
No, I don't look up to Musk only across to him as talented at what
hiredoes
which is far more than NASA will ever do or be.
The NASA of Apollo doesn't exist anymore. Musk has the authority to
thethe best without much regard for PC.
I'm afraid though that the current US gov is hostile to him and may
escalate the road blocks being thrown at him. The 2024 election is
hspencer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>make
or break that will tell if Musk is left alone to do what he does
best,invent and create.
Ken
On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 2:23 PM Henry Spencer <
:-) Notwrote:
On Sun, 18 Dec 2022, roxanna Mason wrote:
SpaceX will get us wherever we need to go...
At the moment, that's religious faith rather than a known fact.
assumeseveryone thinks Saint Elon will save us... (For one thing, it
couldhe
will eventually manage to pry himself away from Twitter!)
and 16 Psyche and other asteroids will have all the metals we
andpossibly need...
Not necessarily so. The nickel-iron asteroids are strong on iron
neednickel and cobalt, which we're not actually short of (although we
distributed),to
do a better job of recycling them, and they're unevenly
lithiumand
okay on platinum-group metals, but markedly short of things like
and onlyand uranium. The metal asteroids are planetary-core fragments,
thingssome metals go into planetary cores. And metals are not the only
won'twe might need, as witness the discussion originally being about
helium-3.
But first, let's get along right here. If there are ET's they
picocosm..let
us contaminate the universe like we have in our tiny little
There's a
Again, I'm afraid, more faith rather than verifiable fact.
people thanwidespread assumption that ETs would *have* to be much nicer
more onwe are -- kind, wise, peaceful, etc. etc. -- but this is based
hatred of our current society than on careful rational reasoning.
Compare
this conception of ETs to the classical conception of angels!
Henry